Tuesday, March 7, 2017

We are a little late in putting up our Lenten reflections but we trust that they may still be helpful for those who read this blog. We are united with the whole Church as we journey through this Lenten season towards Easter..

It is that time again, LENT. Like anyone
who is bothering to read this blog I am thinking about what I should do for
Lent this year. The thought occurs to me that if I rephrase the question I
might come up with a more fruitful answer. So I ask myself what do I want Lent
to do for me? By the time Easter arrives what would I like to be different
about me? How can I make that happen?

The season of Lent is God’s gift to us to
renew our lives in holiness. By the end of Lent I want to be more aware of
God’s love for me and in response to that love to love God more and to reveal
his love to others.

The word Lent comes from an old English
word lencten meaning ‘springtime’. Spring cleaning is a term we are all
familiar with. Once the days begin to lengthen and get brighter we get an itch
to empty cupboards and wash curtains, to get into corners where dust, grime and
dirt may have gathered without our noticing it during the dark days of winter.
This image might not be very vivid in our time when electricity provides us
with light twenty four hours a day . But think back to a time of candle light
and gas lamps. Light that focused on one area and left the rest in shadow and
it becomes quite a powerful image for the season of Lent. There is so much one
does not see in the dark. What a fail-safe programme for Lent- to spend time
allowing CHRIST OUR LIGHT to light up all that is hidden in the dark corners of
our hearts, so that we may remove the accumulation of sin that we may not have been even aware of.
‘Purify me then I shall be clean, wash me I shall be whiter than snow’ is the
clarion call of Lent as we encounter ourselves. Jesus is our Saviour. During
Lent we learn how much we are in need of Him.

Our parents and grandparents depending on
our age, observed Lent with rigorous
physical penances and severe austere fasting from food. In some respects we
seem to be getting off lightly. But while Vatican 11 eased the severe bodily
discipline, it was in order to change our focus during Lent, encouraging us to
make it ‘a period of closer attention to the Word of God and more ardent
prayer’.

I can think of no more powerful programme
for Lent than to make a commitment to spend time each day reflecting on the
Word of God, in the readings at Mass, allowing God to speak to us of his love
and mercy and bringing his Word to bear on our lives.

I invite you to join with us in being
faithful to this commitment. Let us journey together, supporting one another
with prayer.

Mary, temple of the Trinity, Mother of the
Word made flesh, teach us how to ponder the Word in our hearts and to respond
as you did, ‘Be it done unto me according to you will’.

ASH WEDNESDAY

READINGS: Joel 2:12-18, Psalm 50, 2Cor
5:20-6:2, Matthew 6:1-6,16-18

Turn to the Lord again,
for he is all tenderness and compassions slow to anger, rich in graciousness
and ready to relent.

Two little words in the first reading from
the prophet Joel became the focus of my reflection, again and ready. ‘Turn to
the Lord again’. God knows we have
wandered off. There is no need for us to be afraid. That little word assures us
that he is aware of our predicament. No matter how often we have strayed or
where we have strayed to, he is inviting us back yet again. He welcomes us, encourages us. “I’m here waiting, ready to relent, watching for your
return. My heart is full of tenderness and compassion. Come my beloved, come.”

Who could not respond to someone who makes
it so easy for us to return? While we are still a long way off, He sees us. I
picture Him coming, rushing out to meet me with outstretched arms, embracing me
and then putting his arm across my shoulder and leading back into His House. I
have returned home.

Now I am going to remain in his company,
allowing Him to speak to me of His Love.

Thursday after Ash
Wednesday.

Readings: Deut.
30:15-20, ps.1, Luke 9:22-25

Happy indeed is the one

whose delight is the Law of the Lord

and who ponders his law day and night.

He is like a tree that is planted

beside flowing water

that yields its fruit in due season

and whose leaves will
never fade

The Gospel for today
speaks of renouncing myself and taking up my Cross. It all sounds a bit
daunting. It is easy to feel a certain dread. I want to draw back from the
inevitable cost. This Word seems more death dealing than life giving. Mydeath tomyself andmy comforts. I
resist.

But then I
remember my prayer time yesterday, and God’s longing for my return to Him and I
think not of what I am giving up but of Who I am giving it up for. I am
being asked to let go of my way in order to remain in His company. There
will be hard choices, yes, because I am selfish and I need to take on the
responsibility of facing myself. Self indulgence, self centrednes, self
will, all these need to be purified but I see Him standing at a fork in
the road, beckoning me to take His path, to remain in His presence, to journey
with Him. The psalm puts it so beautifully, in choosing Jesus way over my own
will, I am choosing happiness and fruitfulness and He will be with me to guard
my way. I do not journey alone. Every step on the journey to Calvary is a step
nearer to the Resurrection. In each little death the seed of God’s life becomes
more deeply rooted in me.

Thursday, March 2, 2017

I think at times in a nun’s life, she not infrequently stops
and ‘takes stock’ of what has led her to
be where she is, and why she continues and
perseveres in her calling – apart from
the obvious answer,

which is a ‘Who’
rather than a ‘why’ or a ‘what’ – because
obviously Jesus is the answer!

Where does the Gift have its roots?

For many of us, the
gift of our vocation is deeply rooted in our families, even though when it
comes to the point, it is the family which is the most perplexed by our
decision. They can be the most upset and
feel more than anyone else, a sense of ‘loss’ at a daughter’s or sister’s or
niece’s departure from them – almost as if she is abandoning them in choosing
God before them.

And yet, we find on
entering, that when our hearts are moved to thank the Lord for what He has done
in our lives; how He has been so lavish in His gift to us of His very self; and
how we have felt the wonder that He could choose us for such a life of deep
intimacy with Him, as this life is – that the first ‘thing’ we thank Him for is
our family. That is where the journey
began, and the further we walk along the road that will hopefully lead us to
heaven, the more sure we are that it is our families which have shaped and
moulded us and led us to be open to receive and to welcome the gift that this
life is. They are the first people we
pray for, when we come before the Lord in prayer and adoration; and the ones we
carry constantly in our hearts.

So, how do you ‘break the news’ to the people who love
you most?

With difficulty!

But with profound
gratitude, too. Life is a gift,
completely unmerited, and filled with wonder, if we would but take the time to
think. We have been given so much; and
for the much some of us are given, the only way we can express our gratitude to
the Lord for all He has given, is to give our selves to Him, to offer our lives
to Him – for Himself and for those whom we love.

We don’t all have
‘the same inspiration’ in responding to the Lord’s invitation – but the family
is certainly one. May the Lord bless all
our families, and may they know the loving protection and intercession of our Blessed Mother and St Joseph.

Those who are interested in learning more about our Dominican way of life are welcome to join us for the weekend of the 10th - 12th March, (details can be found here).

Vocation Weekends

Whom do you seek?

We seek God, Who alone gives meaning to our lives. Communion with Christ and with one another in love, through a life of prayer centred on Jesus, the Word of God and on the Eucharist, is the focus of our community life.

Single young women attracted to this way of life are welcome to contact us and we will arrange for a visit or some days in our retreat house - either at weekend or during the week. If a few are interested at same time, and if agreeable to all, we can also arrange for a group to spend a few days together.